PETERSBURG, ALASKA – A few days back, Terry Arnesen throttled up the two outboards that swung from the transom of his boat as he angled his home-away-from-home out of this town’s harbor of mostly commercial fishing boats, many of which had seen better days.
Terry’s watercraft wasn’t a “Deadliest Catch”-size trawler, but a 26-foot aluminum pilothouse-style boat he had trailered from the Twin Cities to Seattle before turning north, intent on traveling some 3,000 water miles before returning home.
A semi-retired horse veterinarian and longtime friend who lives in Stillwater, Terry not too many years ago bought his boat, which he dubbed Do North, and set about exploring the salty waters of Alaska’s Inside Passage.
“Now it’s something I want to do as often as I can,” he said. “There’s halibut, salmon, whales, glaciers and beauty everywhere.”
About 10 days ago, my wife, Jan; our older son, Trevor; and I flew to Ketchikan, Alaska, to meet up with Terry. This would be more like camping than crossing the same waters in the Queen Elizabeth or another behemoth cruiser. And southeast Alaska often is enveloped in low, steel gray skies and bordered by roiling seas whose peaks and troughs can still the hearts of small boat owners. But the prospect for adventure was appealing, and sightseeing, too, as was the chance to catch fish as the four of us wound our way north to Juneau, about 300 miles from Ketchikan.
This past week, on Tuesday evening, we tied up Terry’s boat in Petersburg, a small seaside fishing village that can only be reached by air or water. A fishing hub for thousands of years, Petersburg was first settled by Tlingit Native people, before, beginning in the late 1800s, Norwegian entrepreneurs built a cannery and lumber mill here, believing the blue ice of the nearby LeConte Glacier could chill the processed fish.

Today, fishing and seafood processing supports a $40 million Petersburg economy and is the town’s biggest business.
Hungry after a long day on the water, and soon after arriving in Petersburg, we set up a small, gas-fueled hibachi on the dock alongside Terry’s boat. As light rain drizzled from the sky, dense clouds and fog alternately masked and unmasked the surrounding mountains. The temperature was about 50.